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You Got the Touch: The Transformers One Redemption Arc

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Manage episode 518817684 series 3673693
Content provided by Peter Jones and Eden Jones. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter Jones and Eden Jones or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

This week on The Middle of Culture, we close out our dive into Transformers with Transformers One, last year’s animated prequel that tells the origin story of Optimus and Megatron. We rave about how shockingly good it is—beautiful animation, heartfelt storytelling, and voice performances that actually make you care about robots punching each other. Along the way, we talk about Sanderson’s declining prose, the “YA-ification” of modern fiction, the decline of mass-market paperbacks, and why we’ll always have a soft spot for dumb robot movies done well.

Episode Notes

Opening Banter

  • Peter returns from travel (Boise and Napa), happy to be home.
  • Eden vents about a rough week and hostile engineers during digital accessibility training, complete with an on-campus shooting alert mid-meeting.
  • Peter describes an incredible dinner at Bistro Jeanty in Napa (truffle deviled eggs, beef bourguignon, and chocolate croissant bread pudding).

Books & Reading

  • Peter finishes Murder Your Employer by Rupert Holmes (yes, the “Piña Colada Song” guy)—a darkly funny and satisfying story about the McMaster’s School of Homicide.
  • Reads Artificial Condition, the second Murderbot novella, and starts Write Your Novel from the Middle.
  • Discussion on how story structure midpoints define theme and cohesion.
  • Critique of Brandon Sanderson’s Wind and Truth: great worldbuilding, but noticeably weaker prose since losing his longtime editor.
  • Eden speculates that the issue might extend to the whole fantasy industry—less editing, more aesthetic consumerism, and the death of the mass-market paperback.
  • Broader talk on the “dumbing down” of fiction and the rise of YA and “New Adult” markets catering to comfort rather than challenge.

Music & Games Corner

  • Peter dives into rediscovering Psychotic Waltz, Psychonaut, and Oramet—bands that balance progressive creativity with restraint.
  • New release highlight: PowerWash Simulator 2.
  • Eden tests two disappointing gacha games (Duet Night Abyss and Resonance Solstice) and finally uninstalls all HoyoVerse titles.
  • Back to Final Fantasy XIV, excited about the new patch allowing full cross-class glamours.

Main Feature – Transformers One (2024)

  • Both agree: it’s the best Transformers movie ever made—heartfelt, gorgeously animated, and genuinely emotional.
  • Plot rundown: Orion Pax (Optimus) and D16 (Megatron) rise from the oppressed underclass of “Cogless” robots, uncover Sentinel Prime’s corruption, and witness the birth of Autobot vs. Decepticon ideology.
  • Core theme: friendship, betrayal, and revolution—the tragedy of two friends who believe in justice but choose different paths.
  • Voice acting highlights:
    • Brian Tyree Henry’s nuanced Megatron is phenomenal.
    • John Hamm nails the duplicitous Sentinel Prime.
    • Scarlett Johansson and Chris Hemsworth have real chemistry, even if Hemsworth is the weakest link.
    • Laurence Fishburne brings gravitas as Alpha Trion.
    • Keegan-Michael Key’s Bumblebee is purposefully annoying but fits the tone.
  • Praise for the movie’s subtle callbacks to the 1986 film (“You don’t have the touch or the power”), strong emotional beats, and sense of earned tragedy.
  • Both lament how poorly it performed at the box office—“we are part of the problem”—and hope it gets a sequel.
  • Brief detour comparing the animated film’s depth to the shallow chaos of the Michael Bay series.

Closing Thoughts

  • Transformers One feels like the first time the franchise truly understood its own heart.
  • Recommendation: watch it—it’s smart, emotional, and fun as hell.

  continue reading

98 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 518817684 series 3673693
Content provided by Peter Jones and Eden Jones. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter Jones and Eden Jones or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

This week on The Middle of Culture, we close out our dive into Transformers with Transformers One, last year’s animated prequel that tells the origin story of Optimus and Megatron. We rave about how shockingly good it is—beautiful animation, heartfelt storytelling, and voice performances that actually make you care about robots punching each other. Along the way, we talk about Sanderson’s declining prose, the “YA-ification” of modern fiction, the decline of mass-market paperbacks, and why we’ll always have a soft spot for dumb robot movies done well.

Episode Notes

Opening Banter

  • Peter returns from travel (Boise and Napa), happy to be home.
  • Eden vents about a rough week and hostile engineers during digital accessibility training, complete with an on-campus shooting alert mid-meeting.
  • Peter describes an incredible dinner at Bistro Jeanty in Napa (truffle deviled eggs, beef bourguignon, and chocolate croissant bread pudding).

Books & Reading

  • Peter finishes Murder Your Employer by Rupert Holmes (yes, the “Piña Colada Song” guy)—a darkly funny and satisfying story about the McMaster’s School of Homicide.
  • Reads Artificial Condition, the second Murderbot novella, and starts Write Your Novel from the Middle.
  • Discussion on how story structure midpoints define theme and cohesion.
  • Critique of Brandon Sanderson’s Wind and Truth: great worldbuilding, but noticeably weaker prose since losing his longtime editor.
  • Eden speculates that the issue might extend to the whole fantasy industry—less editing, more aesthetic consumerism, and the death of the mass-market paperback.
  • Broader talk on the “dumbing down” of fiction and the rise of YA and “New Adult” markets catering to comfort rather than challenge.

Music & Games Corner

  • Peter dives into rediscovering Psychotic Waltz, Psychonaut, and Oramet—bands that balance progressive creativity with restraint.
  • New release highlight: PowerWash Simulator 2.
  • Eden tests two disappointing gacha games (Duet Night Abyss and Resonance Solstice) and finally uninstalls all HoyoVerse titles.
  • Back to Final Fantasy XIV, excited about the new patch allowing full cross-class glamours.

Main Feature – Transformers One (2024)

  • Both agree: it’s the best Transformers movie ever made—heartfelt, gorgeously animated, and genuinely emotional.
  • Plot rundown: Orion Pax (Optimus) and D16 (Megatron) rise from the oppressed underclass of “Cogless” robots, uncover Sentinel Prime’s corruption, and witness the birth of Autobot vs. Decepticon ideology.
  • Core theme: friendship, betrayal, and revolution—the tragedy of two friends who believe in justice but choose different paths.
  • Voice acting highlights:
    • Brian Tyree Henry’s nuanced Megatron is phenomenal.
    • John Hamm nails the duplicitous Sentinel Prime.
    • Scarlett Johansson and Chris Hemsworth have real chemistry, even if Hemsworth is the weakest link.
    • Laurence Fishburne brings gravitas as Alpha Trion.
    • Keegan-Michael Key’s Bumblebee is purposefully annoying but fits the tone.
  • Praise for the movie’s subtle callbacks to the 1986 film (“You don’t have the touch or the power”), strong emotional beats, and sense of earned tragedy.
  • Both lament how poorly it performed at the box office—“we are part of the problem”—and hope it gets a sequel.
  • Brief detour comparing the animated film’s depth to the shallow chaos of the Michael Bay series.

Closing Thoughts

  • Transformers One feels like the first time the franchise truly understood its own heart.
  • Recommendation: watch it—it’s smart, emotional, and fun as hell.

  continue reading

98 episodes

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